The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 02, 1984, Image 3

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    Monday, April 2, 1984/The Battalion/Page 3
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What’s up
MONDAY
AGGIES FOR BARTON: There will be a meeting in
407 A&B Rudder Tower. Contact Cathy Hay at 693-
5594 for the time.
ALPHA KAPPA PSI: A general business meeting will be
held from 8-9:15 p.m. in 158 Blocker. This meeting is
mandatory! Call Denise Meschwitz at 696-0036 for more
information.
CATHOLIC STUDENT ASSOCIATION Join us
Monday through Thursday for night prayer in the
church at 10 p.m. This schedule for night prayer will
continue through Lent.
1M-REC SPORTS DEPARTMENT: Entries for frisbee
golf will open at 8 a.m. in 159 E. Kyle. There will be a
practice session for homerun and baseball hitting from
5-7 p.m. at the batting cage in Olsen Field. An extramu
ral sports club meeting will be held at 7 p.m in 167 E.
Kyle. For more information, call 845-7826 or come hy
159 E. Kyle.
MSC CAMAC: There will be a meeting at 7 p.m, in 704
Rudder Tower. Plans for the upcoming banquet will be
discussed and officer applications will be accepted. This
is a very urgent meeting! Call Jose Acosta for more in
formation.
MSC OPAS: Prospective member orientations will be con
ducted tonight at 7 p.m. in 502 Rudder Tower and on
Wednesday at 7 p.m. Those who are interested must at
tend one meeting! To pick up applications, see Jody in
the Student Programs Office, 216 of the MSC. For more
information, contact Tad Pruitt at 260-4789, Barbara
Ramago at 260-0951 or Arlene Manthey at 845-1515.
MSC VARIETY SHOW: Tickets are on sale at the MSC
Box Office. Student tickets are $3 and non-student tick
ets are $3.50. The show is scheduled for April 13 at 7
p.m.
METHODIST STUDENT MOVEMENT: A lunch and
Bible study will be held at noon in the Wesley Founda
tion {behind Pizza Hut). Bring lunch or $i for sand
wiches. Another lunch and Bible study will be held Tues
day at 12:30 p.m. Call 846-4701 for more information.
PHI ETA SIGMA: A banquet for all new members will be
held at 7 p.m. in 201 of the MSC. The officer election re
sults will be announced. All new members welcome! Call
Dennis Akins at 260-1789 for more information.
PLANO HOMETOWN CLUB: There will be a meeting
4 at 8:30 p.m. in 502 Rudder Tower. Officer elections and
the upcoming party will be discussed. Call Steve Middle-
ton at 260-2175 or Elizabeth W'elman at 260-5654 for
more information.
RHA: Ron Sasse will present a motivational program on
leadership at 7 p.m. in 402 Rudder Tower. This pro
gram is in preparation for Hall Council Week.
STUDENT ACTIVITIES: Pavilion cubicle applications
are now being accepted in 208 of the Pavilion for student
organization cubicles, storage cabinets and offices,
deadline lor applications is April 25 at 5 p.m.
The
Lucas’ first death-penalty trial starts
United Press International
SAN ANGELO — Witnesses
in the first death-penalty trial of
admitted mass murderer Henry
Lee Lucas were scheduled Mon
day to begin outlining the state’s
case in the 1979 Georgetown
slaying of an unidentified hitch
hiker.
Lucas is-accused of strang
ling, robbing, kidnapping and
sexually assaulting the woman,
whose body was found along
Interstate 35 in central Texas
on Halloween night. She was
clad only in orange socks.
State District Judge John
Carter granted the 47-year-old
drifter and former Michigan
mental patient a change of ve
nue for the trial. Court officials
said the prosecution and de
fense each planned to call about
10 witnesses.
One defense witness will be
Ottis Toole, a Florida inmate
and former traveling compan
ion of Lucas. Lucas’ attorneys
say they will argue he is inno
cent by reason of insanity.
He has confessed to more
than 150 slayings across the
country. Although previously
convicted of two Texas mur
ders, this is the first time Lucas
has faced a capital murder
charge.
If convicted, he would re
ceive a sentence of life in prison
or the death penalty.
Georgetown attorneys spent
13 days questioning more than
80 potential jurors to seat a
four-man, eight-woman jury
with two women alternates.
Jury selection was completed
Wednesday.
Williamson County District
Attorney Ed Walsh has said he
will seek the death penalty if
Lucas is convicted.
“This is the first capital mur
der case for everybody except
Walsh,” defense attorney Par
ker McCullough said last week.
Carter previously ruled con
fessions Lucas gave Williamson
County authorities will be al
lowed as evidence.
Defense attorney Don Hig
ginbotham said Lucas made the
statements to give police what
they wanted to hear and also as
“legal suicide” in remorse for
the stabbing death of his 15-
year-old common-law wife,
Frieda “Becky” Powell.
Lucas received a life sentence
for Powell’s death and also was
sentenced to 75 years in prison
for the slaying of an elderly
Ringgold woman.
Kansas University to sponsor
Vietnam awareness week
ancellor appointed
to U.S. energy board
'Oted for Wi| University News Service
j, ,. ■ lexas A&.-M University Sys-
, 1 a r In 8' ' Ini Chancellor Arthur G. Han
sen has been appointed by LJ.S.
of Energy Donald
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ays about'
for him as s
Ecretary
Rml Holden to serve on the En-
||gy Research Advisory Board.
■ The board, established in
1D78, advises Hodel and princi-
lis ‘rainbowi P«> Department of Energy offi
cers on national energy re
search and development
l|ogramsand policies.
■ “In this capacity, the board
|8ays an important role in pro
viding outside advice to the De-
Dunds betterw rtme nt of Energy,” Hodel
lid. “The findings and recom-
r itundations of the new board
t|ive provided, and should con
tinue to provide, valuable input
to the decision-making process
that shapes our nation’s energy
f|ture.”
I Hansen said he welcomes the
Opportunity to serve on the
ard.
“My service on the Energy
Research Advisory Board
should provide a unique oppor
tunity to obtain a broad picture
of our national energy research
C osture,” he said. “I view this as
eing particularly important to
the Texas A&M System.”
The Texas A&M System has
long been involved in energy
research in a variety of areas^^
United Press International
LAWRENCE, Kan. — A
week-long effort to raise money
for a Vietnam memorial in the
nation’s wheatbelt begins today,
in memory of University of
Kansas students who died in the
jungles and rice paddies of
Southeast Asia.
The fundraiser coincides
with POWMIA-Vietnam Me
morial Awareness Week at K.U.
“This isn’t a memorial to the
Vietnam War, but a memorial
to K.U. students who died in
that war ... to honor the sacri
fices of those K.U. students who
served and died,” said Lisa
Ashner, a member of the Uni
versity of Kansas Vietnam Me
morial Committee.
“I just thought it was some
thing that was neglected on our
campus,” the 21-year-old senior
said.
Since last fall, about half of
the $30,000 needed for the me
morial has been raised. Plans
call for the memorial, a foun
tain incorporated with lime
stone, to be built in a courtyard
near the student union.
So far, most donations have
come from student groups, she
said. The committee hopes this
week’s activities will result in do
nations from a wider spectrum!
Through what is described as
a tedious search, the committee
has uncovered the names of 51
K.U. students who were killed
or are listed as missing in action
in Vietnam. Ms. Ashner said
those names will appear on the
memorial, which she hopes will
be constructed by next Veterans
Day, Nov. 11.
“This memorial has pro
voked discussion about Viet
nam, what it was about, what
was right about it or what was
wrong,” she said. “If we are not
to repeat things like that, we
have to be aware of it.”
The initial sponsor of POW-
ecause you ft
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HAYS COUNTY
STUDENTS
Please come to the organizational
meeting for the Hays County
Hometown Club.
April 4th 1301 Bartholow #40B
for more information, call 693-0171
Oitc
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DOC
Live close to the Excitement.
ion, 216 Red
'cM Urimrsb 1
al is entitled
ction of all nr»f
i of reproduce
ved.
1 at College
Cripple Creek Condominiums offer you style.
Located in the heart of student living, these new con
dominiums are close to restaurants, shopping, clubs,
banking facilities and right on the shuttle bus route.
Cripple Creek is affordable for even the most
discriminating budget. Starting as low as $39,950. you
gel free features that are charged for in most con
dominiums. You’ll enjoy a microwave oven, automatic
icemakers. large walk-in closets, tennis courts and a
swimming pool.
For a lifestyle that can be yours, visit the new Cripple
Creek Condominiums.
CONDOMINIUMS
904 University Oaks #56
(409) 764-8682 (409) 846-5741
Models Open Daily
Developed by Stanford Associates. Inc.
MIA-Vietnam Memorial
Awareness Week was the uni
versity’s ROTC Arnold Air So
ciety chapter.
The ROTC groi/p will circu
late petitions that demand a full
accounting of the 2,500 Ameri
cans who are listed as missing in
action or who were prisoners of
war whose fate remains un
known, said Brett A. Loyd,
commander of the ROTC chap
ter.
Loyd, 20, a junior, said the
petitions would be forwarded to
the Vietnamese consulate at the
United Nations.
On Thursday, retired Lt.
Gen John P. Flynn, San Anto
nio, will discuss his 5 , /t years of
captivity in North Vietnam. He
was the highest ranking U.S.
Air Force officer captured dur
ing the war.
Kay Bosiljevac, Omaha, Neb.,
a member of the National
League of Families, will speak
Wednesday. In 1972, her hus
band, Maj. Michael Bosiljevac,
was shot down over North Viet
nam.
Lawrence-area veterans
show slides of their tours
Vietnam today.
will
in
ATTENTION
ALL GENERAL
STUDIES
STUDENTS
PLEASE COME BY 101
ACADEMIC BUILDING TO PICK
UP YOUR PRE-REGISTRATION
WORKSHEET.
BRAZOS
VALLEY
GOLF
DRIVING
RANGE
Mon.-Fri. 12-9pm
Sat. 10am-9pm
Sun. 1pm-8pm
696-1220
East Bypass and Hwy. 30.
Service Road Going South -
miles.
%
SOUTH AFRICA y^JHE
SERIES 1984 / U -S. APPROACH:'
CONSTRUCTIVE
.ENGAGEMENT.
EDWARD FUGIT
U.S. COUNTRY OFFICER TO SOUTH AFRICA
TUES.
APRIL 3
RUDDER
RM. 601
FREE
8=00 PM
i c^tTTlemomal Student Centen 1
Thanks largely to our SCONA experience, to the entire
A&M population we reluctantly confess a heretofore well
guarded secret: It strikes us that to be an Aggie is an
honor which one can be most proud.”
-UT Delegates
MSC SCONA 28
Texas A&M is a first-class institution with first-class peo
ple. Period.
-LSU Delegate
MSC SCONA 29
SCONA was one of the most valuable and enjoyable
experiences I’ve ever had.
-York University Delegate
Toronto, Canada
MSC SCONA 29
Be A Part of the SCONA Experience
MSC STUDENT CONFERENCE
ON
NATIONAL AFFAIRS
NEW
MEMBER
INTERVIEWS
APPLICATIONS
AVAILABLE
ROOM 216 MSC
April 2-April 10